No photos taken - may hoik an old one up purely for decorative purposes though. I was away at 8.30 (having woken early again, at 6 a.m.) and I stopped only briefly at Morrisons in Aber for cheese that Tam needed, and sugar (nearly out) and Hendo's relish (Henderson's, a Northern variety Tam got used to in her years in Yorkshire). I noted that the cheapest fuel was at Morrison's (£1.45 a L for diesel) - even the garage at Ponterwyd which is normally the cheapest place was - this time - the dearest and even dearer than Builth at £157.9. So I topped up at Morrisons, as it made sense.
So I have spent all day keeping Rosie amused, after helping Tam to move the masses of "stuff" which has accumulated in Rosie's bedroom. Tam is decorating in there, ready for Rosie to move across as she's 2 in a couple of weeks' time. Rosie should be getting towards potty training soon as she laid out her changing mat and obligingly laid down on it today, so I could change her nappy.
She borrowed my pen at one point and drew on her hands, and when Tam came down, went over and said "Look, I'm drawing on myself"! That is pretty good going to have that sense of self and not yet 2. When I was reading her a book, she was pointing to the pictures and saying Santa Claus (it was a Christmas book . . .), stars, trees, presents etc. Little Miss Clever Clogs. What made me smile is some words she says with a definite Northern vowel. Now, I'm a Southerner, Tam's lived in Wales all her life (bar her time in Yorkshire, and she doesn't have a Yorkshire accent) and Jon is Welsh . . . As I said before, she's an old soul, that one . . .
I had a low cloud/foggy drive through the mountains, but dry. On the way back the colours of the hillsides were more visible - the dun colour of the purple moor grass tussocks, the faded grazing, a stippling of brighter green in the hedgerows either side of the mountain pass where it was warmer and Hawthorn happily putting out a good display of leaves. On the B road to Tam's, there was a covert of Gorse in full bloom - such a stunning yellow and had the sun been out, I am sure I would have smelt the Coconut perfume of it. I didn't see the sea today, but it was there all the same.
I am glad to be home and not feeling like I was yesterday. I was listening to Robert Macfarlane's The Old Ways in the car and really enjoying it. A couple of chapters I had read were what I listened to today, including the Icknield Way, where he speaks of my favourite author and poet Edward Thomas. Then it was a sea walk - I can remember thinking the same "oh my God, I wouldn't do that" when he spoke of walking The Broomway - a "footpath" which traverses an area of the North Sea off the Essex Coast, near Foulness. Having lost his guide (due to family matters), he and a friend walked it, despite being warned NOT to if it was foggy as it goes out into the sea and can become disorientating in poor visibility. Of course, it was foggy when they arrived, but they did it anyway. Having got to the other end, and heading back, they reckoned they had a couple of hours before the tide turned (and it came in very fast there) yet still walked directly out to sea, thinking of Doggerland and walking towards where it was under many feet of water. Yeesh - what is it about men, tell them not to do something and they feel compelled to go ahead and do it anyway! Now I am on the chapters about sea roads. He quoted from Facing the Ocean by Barry Cunliffe. I bought this for Keith, but just looked for it and haven't got it so must have passed it on.
I looked at the layout for the table topper this morning and it slipped into place today. It was sensible to stop when I did yesterday.






























